Diane Victor
Smoke Screen 9 (Frailty and Failing)
2009
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Diane Victor
Smoke Screen 9 (Frailty and Failing)
2009
Physical Qualities
Smoke soot from candle over graphite on paper, Sheet: 660 x 508 mm. (26 x 20 in.)
Credit Line
Purchased as the gift of Dr. Peyton Eggleston, Baltimore
Object Number
2011.35
Diane Victor’s ghostly portraits of a missing child and an incarcerated man are part of a series of smoke drawings that call attention to the vulnerability of lives lost or removed from society. Having developed an astonishing technique, Victor mounted her paper overhead and laboriously moved the flame of a candle beneath the paper’s surface
to create portraits with the smoke’s carbon deposits. Although she was able to reinforce the marks and then dust away excess residue using a dry brush, she did not permanently fix the fragile image to the paper. Doing so would have caused a reaction within the carbon and caused the image to disappear.
The transient quality of materials used and their result—a work easily subject to erasure—subtly question society’s feckless tendency to overlook people whose histories are deemed too troubling, who too easily disappear from our vaporous memories. By securing their blurred images in the forefront of our minds, Victor resurrects their existence. The faces in these drawings float, or fall, within the paper’s vastness. Smoke trails to the edges with no body or background to serve as context.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by purchase, 2011; David Krut Projects; the artist
Shifting Views: People & Politics in Contemporary African Art
Inscribed: lower left in graphite: "DVictor"
